The document discusses various topics related to innovation including open innovation, business model innovation, different levels of innovation, knowledge creation and leadership, dynamic capabilities, platforms and innovation, social communities, and measuring the success of a business model. It provides examples and definitions for concepts like open innovation, dynamic capabilities, and the role of business models in connecting technical and economic domains.
18. The Dow-Jones index of the largest companies traded on the U.S Stock … market declined 22%, the worst week in the index's 118-year history
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24. Growth is top of mind for business executives. Strong, value creating revenue growth lies within reach of corporations that pursue best practice in innovation, strategy, marketing, operations and organizations . For companies aspiring to grow, where to compete is just as important as how. To choose the right battlegrounds, they must match their distinctive capabilities with sectors where profitability growth is likely to occur. W HERE and H OW to G row ?
30. T he Five Lessons of the (Service) Innovation Journey
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32. Open Innovation means that valuable ideas can come from inside or outside the company (industry) and can go to market from inside or outside the company (industry) as well 1 . This approach places external ideas and external path to market on the same level of importance as that reserved for internal ideas and paths to market during the Closed Innovation era 2 . CLOSED & OPEN BUSINESS MODEL OPEN INNOVATION! 1,2 H.Chesbrough, 2003
33. Our current market Our new market Other firm´s market O pen i nnovation External technology insourcing Internal technology base External technology base Henry Chesbrough , 2004 Internal/external venture handling Licence, spin out, divest
34. At any given point in time, firms must follow a certain trajectory or path of competence development. This path not only defines what choices are open to the firm today, but it also puts bounds around what its internal repertoire is likely to be in the future 1 . STEP OUT OF THE BOX!!! PATH DEPENDENCY We had become stuck in our past and weren’t stretching far enough to innovate new ideas , to “step out of the box.” D avid O. Swain , ex. CTO, Boeing 1 Teece et al, 1997
35. Learning & Diversity Boeing VP Dick Paul & CTO David O. Swain went to P&G and asked how they were getting ideas and how they were thinking about R&D. After the visit they remarked, “P&G had some great thoughts, which affected what we did; we went home and did a couple of things differently and that was an example of us beginning to open our eyes to the world and trying to integrate that into our planning process
36. D ynamic capabilities as the firm's ability to integrate, build, and reconfigure internal and external competences to address rapidly changing environments 1 . S ome dynamic capabilities integrate resources (product development; strategic decision making), others focus on reconfiguration of recourses (knowledge brokering) within firm and other dynamic capabilities are related to the gain and release of recourses (knowledge creation routines; alliance, acquisition and exit routines) 2 . EXPLORATION & TRANSFORMATION DYNAMIC CAPABILITIES Roald Amundsen, Robert Scott, Umberto Nobile 1 Teece et al 1997 2 Eisenhardt and Martin 2000
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38. Developing Portfolio of Capabilities Ope rational Capabilities Technological Capabilities Transforming Seizing Sensing Open Capabilities Dynamic Capabilities Learning Innovation
41. P latform leaders (companies that drive industry wide innovation for an evolving system of separately developed pieces of technology) are navigating challenges from wannabes (companies that want to be platform leaders) and complementors (companies that make ancillary products that expand the platform’s market. Platform leadership is the ability of a company to drive innovation around a particular platform technology at the broad industry level . Cusumano and Gawer (2002)
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48. EADS Space Plane from London to Sydney – 2,5 hours
51. LOCATION COMMUNITY LOCATION COMMERCE E-Commerce + M-Commerce = L-Commerce
52. GPS -Enabled LBS Subscribers by Region , World Market: 2005 to 2011 * * ABI Research
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63. PLATFORMS & Business Models Google & Microsoft Google Earth Microsoft Virtual Earth
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68. GROWTH & OPEN BUSINESS MODEL The business model provides a coherent framework that takes technological characteristics and potentials as inputs, and converts them through customers and markets into economic outputs 1 . A business model has two functions: 1.Value creation 2.Value capture 1 Chesbrough, Roosenbloom 2002
73. Focus in Business Model A business model is a conceptual tool that contains a big set of elements and their relationships and allows expressing the business logic of a specific firm. It is a description of the value a company offers to one or several segments of customers and of the architecture of the firm and its network of partners for creating, marketing, and delivering this value and relationship capital, to generate profitable and sustainable revenue streams. Osterwalder, Pigneur and Tucci (2005)
75. Portfolio of Capabilities & Business Model Open Capabilities Dynamic Capabilities Operational Capabilities Technology Capabilities Portfolio
76. how do you measure the success of a business model?
77. Revenue Growth, Life Cycle & Innovation Dynamics Business model innovation has captured the attention of executives tasked with achieving growth in the face of increasing competitive pressure. Business model innovation suggests that if you took an existing product and repackaged how you sold it, you can hold off competitive pressures and even capture entirely new market segments.